NFL Players Association executive director DeMaurice Smith. Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports

NFLPA leader wants to make big change to draft process

The NFL draft has become a year-long event, but DeMaurice Smith, the leader of the NFL Players Association, would like to see some of that scaled back by eliminating the Scouting Combine. 

Instead, he wants to see the NFL develop more regional Pro Days where players can work out and show off their skills under their terms in an NFLPA-approved environment. 

His biggest objection to the combine is players having to surrender all of their medical rights while being asked intrusive questions.

"As soon as you show up, you have to waive all of your medical rights and you not only have to sit there and endure embarrassing questions," said Smith on Wednesday, via ESPN.com. "And I think that's horrible, and I don't wanna pooh pooh any of that, but would you want your son to spend hours inside of an MRI [machine] and then be evaluated by 32 separate team doctors who are, by the way, are only doing it for one reason? What's the reason? To decrease your draft value."

Smith went on to add that the league doesn't need a combine to evaluate players' physical skills because they have been evaluated from the time they were kids and they don't need a combine to see how fast somebody is. He believes the only purpose of the combine is to ask intrusive questions and get medical information. 

Unfortunately for Smith, removing the combine and focusing more on NFLPA-approved Pro Days is almost certainly something that will need to be collectively bargained. Aside from giving all 32 teams the ability to speak with all of the best draft prospects in one place, it has also turned into a money-making event for the league. It gets primetime coverage on NFL Network, the league has started selling tickets to it for fans to attend, and it continues to push the year-long draft coverage that is a major focal point of discussion even during the season. 

There is also the reality that whether it is done at the combine, at a Pro Day, at the Senior Bowl, or at an official pre-draft visit teams are still going to ask prospects the same intrusive questions and try to get medical information on them. The combine just makes it easier for them to do that in one place. 

So while Smith might have some legitimate gripes with how the combine is handled, it is probably not going away anytime soon. Even if it did, teams would still have ways to get the information they want. 

More must-reads:

TODAY'S BEST
Lightning winger named a potential buyout candidate
Curry Brand signs 'Japanese Steph Curry' to multi-year deal
Steelers LB T.J. Watt addresses retirement timeline
136-game streak comes to an end for Spain in Euro 2024 opener
Watch: Bryson DeChambeau pays tribute to the late Payne Stewart after winning U.S. Open
Rory McIlroy chokes away U.S. Open with pair of brutal missed putts
Watch: Dodgers' Mookie Betts leaves game after taking 98 mph pitch to hand
Dodgers' Dave Roberts confirms Yoshinobu Yamamoto is going on 15-day IL
Ryan Blaney staves off challengers for dominant win at Iowa Corn 350
Sky forward Angel Reese rips officials following loss to Fever
Watch: Denmark's Christian Eriksen nets goal at Euro 2024 three years after suffering cardiac arrest
Watch: UFL championship marred by late on-field altercation between Stallions, Brahmas
Is Commanders' Jayden Daniels likely to open season as starting QB?
Kyrie Irving's warning to potential Celtics is being taken out of context
What could the Ducks fetch for Trevor Zegras in trade?
The biggest surprises during the 2024 MLB season so far
Dodgers star will miss 'some time' with broken bone in left wrist
Former MLB journeyman dies at 61 years old
Pivotal Celtics center deemed questionable ahead of Game 5
Draymond Green weighs in on Klay Thompson's latest move